The table below shows the minimum mean,median,max, and amount of respondents whose information generated inconclusive results, 259 for Big Business and 236. Furthermore this table presents a standard deviation for Big Business(16.52), which indicates a large disparity between respondents answers. The same can be said for the variance of Working Class whose SD is 22.58.
Summary Statics Summary Statics
Minimum
Median
Mean
Max
NA's
Standard Deviation
Big Biz
0
50
55.27
100
259
16.52
Working Class
1
85
83.97
100
236
22.58
The correlation between Big Business and Work Class is 0.1970637, indicating that there is no correlation among chosen variables. The visual representation of this is shown below low using a scatter plot. From this we can see that opinions are so far varied among Big Business and Working Class that dependence among the two is unlikely. (Hmm, is a correlation of .19 "no" correlation? You're quite close to right, because a correlation that small is not really reliable at all--but it's not exactly "no" correlation! It's just a little bit of correlation, right?)
Violin Plots depicted below show the median feelings of Big Business between 40-60 indicated by the white, while the median feelings for Big Business is between 80- 100. This shows that respondents tend to feel stronger toward the working class while they feel less strong as it relates to Big Business. Also the is a larger range of feeling within Big Business from 0-100, while the Working Class ranges from 20-100. This information is in direct agreement with Histograms for both Big Business and Working Class. (Is this the best way to present these graphs? I'd think to put the violin plot by its corresponding histogram, right? Or maybe stacked?)
From the density plot for the Working Class we can see a small number of respondents have little to no concern for the working class. As the number of respondents care we can see stronger feelings, density increases with number of respondents. The density plot if Big Business show that density increase increases in the midrange but slowly declines at 0.015 and 80.
(How do we interpret those dips? Are they substantively interesting or is there maybe just psychological rigidity in how people choose their values?)
The correlation between Big Business and Work Class is 0.1970637, indicating that there is no correlation among chosen variables. The visual representation of this is shown below low using a scatter plot. From this we can see that opinions are so far varied among Big Business and Working Class that dependence among the two is unlikely.
(Hmm, is a correlation of .19 "no" correlation? You're quite close to right, because a correlation that small is not really reliable at all--but it's not exactly "no" correlation! It's just a little bit of correlation, right?)
Violin Plots depicted below show the median feelings of Big Business between 40-60 indicated by the white, while the median feelings for Big Business is between 80- 100. This shows that respondents tend to feel stronger toward the working class while they feel less strong as it relates to Big Business. Also the is a larger range of feeling within Big Business from 0-100, while the Working Class ranges from 20-100. This information is in direct agreement with Histograms for both Big Business and Working Class.
(Is this the best way to present these graphs? I'd think to put the violin plot by its corresponding histogram, right? Or maybe stacked?)
From the density plot for the Working Class we can see a small number of respondents have little to no concern for the working class. As the number of respondents care we can see stronger feelings, density increases with number of respondents. The density plot if Big Business show that density increase increases in the midrange but slowly declines at 0.015 and 80.
(How do we interpret those dips? Are they substantively interesting or is there maybe just psychological rigidity in how people choose their values?)